History

Details

Terrace of 4 houses. 1852. By Pope, Bindon and Clarke.
Limestone ashlar with lateral and party wall stacks and a
pantile hipped roof. Double-depth plan. Neoclassical style.
2 storeys, attic and basement; 12-window range. A composed
terrace made up of 2 symmetrical pairs linked by a 2-window
centre section. Each pair has a central full-height 3-light
canted bay, with a banded ground floor to a plat band, a
frieze and cornice, and coped attic storey. Doorways in the
end returns and to centre sections: the middle has
semicircular-arched doorways with late Georgian metal
fanlights and 2-leaf half-glazed doors, set in recessed
surrounds with moulded lintels, and a balustrade above, with
the upper floors set back; to the inside of the door is a
matching arch with a 2-light window.
Return elevations are symmetrical with single-storey open
porches to 2-leaf doors and overlights with diagonal bars.
Ground-floor windows set in recessd surrounds with moulded
lintels, tripartite windows to the inner side of the bays,
with 6/6-pane and flanking 2/2-pane sashes. First-floor has
architraves and cornices, attic windows with cills breaking
the cornice, to 6/6-pane sashes. No.2 has a right-hand canted
oriel with a moulded base.
INTERIOR not inspected. An unusual terrace composed of 2
disguised semi-detached pairs.
(Gomme A, Jenner M and Little B: Bristol, An Architectural
History: Bristol: 1979-: 272).

Listing NGR: ST5731573436

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